Over the past 15 years, China has come to dominate the global market for solar energy. Nearly every solar panel on the planet is made by a Chinese company. Even the equipment to manufacture solar panels is made almost entirely in China. The country’s solar panel exports, measured by how much power they can produce, jumped another 10 percent in May over last year.
But China’s solar panel domestic industry is in upheaval.
Wholesale prices plummeted by almost half last year and have fallen another 25 percent this year. Chinese manufacturers are competing for customers by cutting prices far below their costs, and still keep building more factories.
The price slashing has taken a severe toll on China’s solar companies. Stock prices of its five biggest makers of panels and other equipment have halved in the past 12 months. Since late June, at least seven large Chinese manufacturers have warned that they will announce heavy losses for the first half of this year.
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Something similar is happening in the automotive sector. Annual car sales in China are around 25 million a year, more than any other country but barely half the country’s ability to make vehicles. So automakers in China are now following the solar industry’s lead in cutting prices sharply and ramping up exports.
China’s approach can lead to big financial losses for local governments, state investment funds and state-supported banks, all of which bankroll companies in favored industries.
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China’s banks, acting at Beijing’s direction, have lent so much money to the sector for factory construction that the country’s solar factory capacity is roughly double the entire world’s demand.
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Solar manufacturers across China have been laying off thousands of workers to cut costs — and those workers may be the lucky ones because they qualify for months of severance pay. Other big solar companies have resorted to tactics like giving yearlong unpaid vacations or 30 percent pay cuts for employees who keep their jobs.
Solar manufacturers across China have been laying off thousands of workers to cut costs — and those workers may be the lucky ones because they qualify for months of severance pay. Other big solar companies have resorted to tactics like giving yearlong unpaid vacations or 30 percent pay cuts for employees who keep their jobs.
Oh man, that really doesn't sound like a healthy situation. Generally, overproduction in an up-and-coming field like solar panels is great, but double the capacity is just not sustainable.
the country’s solar factory capacity is roughly double the entire world’s demand
Oh man, that really doesn't sound like a healthy situation. Generally, overproduction in an up-and-coming field like solar panels is great, but double the capacity is just not sustainable.
In general I've been struggling to understand why the Chinese government seems hell bent on production to keep their economy up when it's not sustainable. One of their biggest problems is domestic...
In general I've been struggling to understand why the Chinese government seems hell bent on production to keep their economy up when it's not sustainable. One of their biggest problems is domestic demand, not production. It's made the voices in the EU regarding production at home more substantial. It's also not helpful in their rivalry with the West as many other developing countries also want to produce more for their own economies in order to, well, keep developing.
If the direction of the Russian and Chinese economies keep up I wouldn't rule out the BRICS alliance ending up being an Indian sphere of influence in the long term. Of course India has their own problems, but the sustainability of the former two economies appears, to me at least, getting worse and not better.
From the article (archive):
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Oh man, that really doesn't sound like a healthy situation. Generally, overproduction in an up-and-coming field like solar panels is great, but double the capacity is just not sustainable.
In general I've been struggling to understand why the Chinese government seems hell bent on production to keep their economy up when it's not sustainable. One of their biggest problems is domestic demand, not production. It's made the voices in the EU regarding production at home more substantial. It's also not helpful in their rivalry with the West as many other developing countries also want to produce more for their own economies in order to, well, keep developing.
If the direction of the Russian and Chinese economies keep up I wouldn't rule out the BRICS alliance ending up being an Indian sphere of influence in the long term. Of course India has their own problems, but the sustainability of the former two economies appears, to me at least, getting worse and not better.
Sounds like Chinese workers could use a union to defend against crap like that.
Are unions in China a thing?
I'm sure there is an official union controlled by The Party.
I'm also sure it doesn't do much to protect the workers.
But I haven't looked in to it.